Examples of food deception in the following topics:
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- Flowers often attract pollinators with food rewards, in the form of nectar.
- They use a method known as food deception, in which bright colors and perfumes are offered, but no food.
- The bumblebee, its main pollinator, is attracted to the flower because of the strong scent, which usually indicates food for a bee.
- Other orchids use sexual deception .
- Certain orchids use food deception or sexual deception to attract pollinators.
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- A food web describes the flow of energy and nutrients through an ecosystem, while a food chain is a linear path through a food web.
- Both energy and nutrients flow through a food web, moving through organisms as they are consumed by an organism above them in the food web.
- A single path of energy through a food web is called a food chain.
- In both food webs and food chains, arrows point from an organism that is consumed to the organism that consumes it.
- Distinguish between food chains and food webs as models of energy flow in ecosystems
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- Obtaining nutrition and energy from food is a multi-step process.
- For animals, the first step is ingestion, the act of taking in food.
- The large molecules found in intact food cannot pass through the cell membranes.
- The first step in this process is ingestion: taking in food through the mouth.
- While the food is being mechanically broken down, the enzymes in saliva begin to chemically process the food as well.
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- In reaction to the smell, sight, or thought of food, the first hormonal response is that of salivation.
- Simultaneously, the stomach begins to produce hydrochloric acid to digest the food .
- The response to food begins even before food enters the mouth.
- The central nervous system prepares the stomach to receive food.
- The gastric phase begins once the food arrives in the stomach.
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- All mammals have teeth and can chew their food.
- As food is chewed, saliva, produced by the salivary glands, mixes with the food.
- Saliva contains mucus that moistens food and buffers the pH of the food.
- When swallowing, the epiglottis closes the glottis, allowing food to pass into the esophagus, not into the trachea, preventing food from reaching the lungs.
- Digestion of food begins in the (a) oral cavity.
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- Food is not an exception.
- Most of the time, prokaryotes colonize food and food-processing equipment in the form of a biofilm.
- Outbreaks of bacterial infection related to food consumption are common.
- A foodborne disease (colloquially called "food poisoning") is an illness resulting from the consumption of pathogenic bacteria, viruses, or other parasites that contaminate food.
- All types of food can potentially be contaminated with bacteria.
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- Animals use energy for metabolism, obtaining that energy from the breakdown of food through the process of cellular respiration.
- Animals need food to obtain energy and maintain homeostasis.
- The energy it takes to maintain this body temperature is obtained from food.
- The process of converting glucose and excess ATP to glycogen and the storage of excess energy is an evolutionarily-important step in helping animals deal with mobility, food shortages, and famine.
- Summarize the ways in which animals obtain, store, and use food energy
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- Animals use the organs of their digestive systems to extract important nutrients from food they consume, which can later be absorbed.
- The conversion of the food consumed to the nutrients required is a multi-step process involving digestion and absorption.
- During digestion, food particles are broken down to smaller components which will later be absorbed by the body.
- It is responsible for processing ingested food and liquids.
- The functions of the digestive system can be summarized as follows: ingestion (eat food), digestion (breakdown of food), absorption (extraction of nutrients from the food), and defecation (removal of waste products).
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- The basic equation for photosynthesis is deceptively simple.
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- Fats add flavor to food and promote a sense of satiety or fullness.
- Vitamins and minerals are substances found in the food we eat.
- Fat-soluble vitamins are found primarily in foods that contain fat and oil, such as animal fats, vegetable oils, dairy foods, liver, and fatty fish.
- However, you do not need to eat foods containing these every day.
- The rest must be obtained from food.